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As a trustee for coastal resources, NOAA protects and restores habitats injured by hazardous waste sites, oil spills and vessel groundings.   RSS Feed RSS Feed
 
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Photo showing pre-dam removal with sediment excavation. Photo showing post-dam removal with the stabilized river bank.
Pre-dam removal with sediment excavation (Photo courtesy of Alex Hackman).
Bartlett Dam Removal to Benefit Diadromous Fish in Massachusetts

January 2013 – NOAA and its co-trustees (USFWS and Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs) for Natural Resources Damages in Holyoke, MA helped to complete the removal of the Bartlett Fish Rod Company Dam in Pelham, MA to restore fish passage and other ecological services to Amethyst Brook, a tributary to the Connecticut River. Dam removal projects such as these can help restore fisheries by opening up fish access to critical spawning and rearing habitat; allow sediment transport to nourish downstream habitats for species such as sea lamprey, American eel and several freshwater mussel species; improve water quality; and increase opportunities for recreational and commercial fishing interests. This dam removal reconnects the high quality habitats and stream flows of the undeveloped Amethyst Brook watershed with the Fore River and Connecticut River, and ultimately with the Long Island Sound estuary, more than 100 miles downriver, for the first time in almost two hundred years. This restoration project is one of several selected by the trustees to address injuries to migratory fish and freshwater mussel populations caused by coal tar deposit contamination in a reach of the Connecticut River in Holyoke. The Holyoke Coal Tar Deposit Natural Resource Damage settlement funds supplemented grant funds awarded through the NOAA-Fish America Foundation and NOAA-American Rivers Community-Based Restoration Partnerships secured and managed by the Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration (MA DER). NOAA will continue to work with MA DER and other project partners to monitor restoration performance on Amethyst Brook. For more information, contact Jim Turek  (James.G.Turek@noaa.gov).


Photo of a fish consumption advisory sign on Hudson River.
Fish consumption advisory sign on Hudson River.
Photo Courtesy of NOAA
Hudson River PCB Issues Featured in Report and Forum

January 2013 - The Hudson River Natural Resource Trustees released a report on January 16, 2013 on PCB Contamination of the Hudson River Ecosystem. The report documents that the Hudson River, for greater than 200 miles below Hudson Falls, NY, is extensively contaminated with polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Surface waters, sediments, floodplain soils, fish, birds, wildlife, and other natural resources are all polluted with PCBs. The report documents decades of high levels of PCBs and likely adverse effects on living organisms exposed to the contamination in the Hudson River. The public has also lost the use of natural resources, for example, due to restrictions and advisories for catching and eating fish and the navigational losses due to contamination of the Champlain Canal. A Hudson River PCB Forum Linking to a non-federal government web site.This link does not imply endorsement.  was held on January 16 at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, NY. The intent of the forum was to provide mid-Hudson communities with an update on the PCB dredging project Linking to a non-federal government web site.This link does not imply endorsement. , the natural resource damage assessment, and restoration planning by the Hudson River Natural Resource Trustees. Listen to the NPR story Linking to a non-federal government web site.This link does not imply endorsement.  and read the press release. For more information, contact Lisa Rosman or Tom Brosnan..


Shell's mobile drilling rig shown aground off Alaska.
Kulluk, Shell's mobile drilling rig, sits aground off Alaska.
(U.S. Coast Guard)
NOAA Responds to Shell Drilling Rig Kulluk Grounding in Gulf of Alaska

January 2013 – The NOAA Office of Response and Restoration is supporting the U.S. Coast Guard in its response to Shell's 266-foot floating drilling rig Kulluk which ran aground off Alaska. The rig was being transported from where it was drilling in the Beaufort Sea to Seattle, WA for winter maintenance when the tugboats towing the Kulluk suffered engine trouble and lost connection to the rig in severe weather and heavy seas. Federal and state agencies are preparing to assess harm to natural resources from a potential release of diesel fuel from the Kulluk. The shores of Alaska, where the rig grounded, fall within critical habitat for the endangered Stellar sea lion. The rig is also located close to two salmon streams, an area where razor clams are harvested for subsistence use, and a planned tanner crab fishery. Sampling around the rig would allow NOAA to evaluate harm if fuel were to be released, but traveling to the remote area for sampling would be challenging. For more information and updates on the Kulluk rig response effort, visit the NOAA Office of Response and Restoration.



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